ALBANY -- Rick Lazio, the designated Republican candidate for governor, earned at least $1.825 million in 2009, a required financial disclosure released late Thursday shows.

Lazio took an unpaid leave from J.P. Morgan before he announced his candidacy in September 2009, but that year was paid $1.56 million in salary and bonus. Lazio had previously acknowledged those figures to the Times Union, but his filing shows he also derived income from renting storage in an Manhattan co-op, collecting interest and dividends on various investments and the sale of at least $250,000 of J.P. Morgan stock.

Lazio still holds a block of that stock worth at least $250,000, part of at least $1.59 million in assets and $560,000 in retirement savings Lazio declared. His exact net worth -- and income -- are not fully revealed on the forms, in which candidates are required to declare the value of their income and assets in broad categories. The uppermost category ranges upward from $250,000.

The disclosure forms also do not include primary and secondary residences, though Lazio declared an investment property on the tony Upper East Side of Manhattan.

Lazio filed his form with the Commission on Public Integrity two weeks late, saying he misinterpreted the filing deadline. That form is available to the public, but the categorical income and assets are shrouded. Lazio voluntarily released an unredacted copy of the form.

Andrew Cuomo, the Democratic candidate for governor, also shared an unredacted copy of his form. It shows he keeps at least $250,000 in an investment account at AMG National Trust Bank and earned $28,000 from a partnership called POA partners. In April, Cuomo briefed journalists on the contents of his tax returns, and revealed he earned $179,000 in 2009; his salary as attorney general is $141,000.

Democrats attacked Lazio for not releasing his tax returns, which his aides have assured since December will be done at "an appropriate time in the not-too-distant future," and his work on Wall Street and lobbying on behalf of Wall Street firms since he left the House of Representatives in 2000.

"The only thing this disclosure makes crystal clear is that Rick Lazio made a killing as a Wall Street lobbyist while the rest of the economy burned," said Charlie King, executive director of the Democratic State Committee.

Republicans said Cuomo's time with Farkas, coupled with his previous work as secretary of Housing and Urban Development, allowed him to profit from the sub-prime mortgage crisis.

"Andrew Cuomo profited personally during those years by advising Andrew Farkas on how to profit in real estate from the fiscal calamity Cuomo's policies at HUD caused," said Alex Carey, a spokesman for the Republican State Committee.